I think I may have asked a similar question before, but I have never figured out why this happens. You have two bare shafts, similar spine, point weight, etc., but either different brands or maybe one is carbon and the other one is aluminum. One impacts unacceptably nock high, the other one is only slightly nock high. I have had occasions where no matter where I adjusted the nock height, I get nock high, but by switching to another brand, I can adjust the nock height and eliminate the nock high. Obviously, when that happens, I choose the one that I can adjust to eliminate the nock high, but I would like to understand why that happens.
For example, in the photos below, I selected a group of bare shafts that are close in spine to the extent that I could shoot all of them out of the same bow, by making appropriate adjustments to length or point weight. They are a 1716, 1816, 1916, and a Gold Tip 600. You can see from the side view that they all impact at radically different angles. These angles were consistent over several different shots, and are not just one freak event. From the top view, you can see that none of them are radically different in spine. As expected, the 1716 is slightly nock left, indicating weak, and the 1916 is slightly nock right, indicating stiff. Since I’m getting the expected reactions as I move from weaker to stiffer shafts, i don’t think I have a false weak problem.